Biodiversity of chloramphenicol-resistant mesophilic heterotrophs from Southeast Asian aquaculture environments

In the present study, samples of pond water, sediment and farmed species were collected at 12 fish and shrimp farms in Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam to determine the biodiversity and environmental distribution of chloramphenicol-resistant (CmR) mesophilic heterotrophs in Southeast Asian aquaculture...

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Veröffentlicht in:Research in microbiology 2007-04, Vol.158 (3), p.228-235
Hauptverfasser: Huys, Geert, Bartie, Kerry, Cnockaert, Margo, Hoang Oanh, Dang Thi, Phuong, Nguyen Thanh, Somsiri, Temdoung, Chinabut, Supranee, Yusoff, Fatimah Md, Shariff, Mohamed, Giacomini, Mauro, Teale, Alan, Swings, Jean
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In the present study, samples of pond water, sediment and farmed species were collected at 12 fish and shrimp farms in Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam to determine the biodiversity and environmental distribution of chloramphenicol-resistant (CmR) mesophilic heterotrophs in Southeast Asian aquaculture sites. Following isolation on Iso-Sensitest agar supplemented with 35 μg ml −1 Cm and dereplication using (GTG) 5-PCR fingerprinting, 557 genotypically unique CmR strains were subjected to polyphasic identification. The 557 mesophilic heterotrophic CmR isolates represented 18 different genera largely dominated by the genera Escherichia (40.2%), Pseudomonas (11.7%), Acinetobacter (11.1%), Klebsiella (7.5%) and Bacillus (5.9%). A total of 439 CmR isolates were further assigned to 31 described species or species groups, mainly including organisms that have been associated with various human opportunistic infections such as Escherichia coli ( n = 219), Pseudomonas putida ( n = 47), Klebsiella pneumoniae ( n = 38) and Acinetobacter baumannii ( n = 23). Strains of Escherichia, and most notably, of E. coli, were the only common group of CmR heterotrophs irrespective of country, sample type or farm type. Together with other predominant but less widespread groups such as acinetobacters and pseudomonads, the results of this biodiversity study suggest that E. coli can be regarded as a potential indicator of Cm resistance in Southeast Asian aquaculture environments.
ISSN:0923-2508
1769-7123
DOI:10.1016/j.resmic.2006.12.011